View Top Lectures Online: IOC World Conference of Prevention of Injury & Illness in Sport (Monaco, April)

On April 7-9 , 2011 I was among 900 attendees at the fantastic IOC World Conference of Prevention of Injury& Illness in Sport in Monte-Carlo, Monaco. The great program included: Sudden cardiac death (Jonathan Drezner, USA; Antonio Pelliccia, Italy) What is the best practice for musculoskeletal screening if prevention is the objective? (Roald Bahr, Norway) Mechanisms […]

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Dr. Mark Hutchinson’s YouTube Physical Exam Demos at 1.74 Million Views

With 1.74 million video uploads University of Chicago’s Mark Hutchinson is somewhat of a YouTube celebrity. This is a great feat considering his clinician tutorials compete with all those cute animal videos like Slow Loris with a Tiny Umbrella. In all seriousness, Dr. Hutchinson does an outstanding job of demonstrating examination techniques for: Hip and […]

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Management of Tennis Elbow – New BMJ Clinical Review (with video!)

A recently published Clinical Review in BMJ offers a concise overview of the Management of Tennis Elbow. In their article, Dr. John Orchard and PT, Alex Kountouris explain tendon mechanics, loading responses and the fundamental principles of effective treatment programmes. They also discuss the current evidence base for newer minimally invasive treatments such as: platelet-rich […]

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T’ai Chi Gone Viral! The World Reports on Myeong Soo Lee and Edzard Ernst’s Systematic Review

Myeong Soo Lee and  Edzard Ernst received substantial international media attention for their BJSM article: “Systematic reviews of t’ai chi: an overview” (published online, May 16th 2011). In their critical evaluation of 35 systematic reviews, the authors report that T’ai Chi effectively prevents falls and improves psychological health in older adults. This BJSM feature was […]

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Hip imaging pathology – the problem of limited specificity: Guest Blog by Dr. David Hughes

I can’t recall the number of times I have had to explain to a patient that an abnormal lumbar spine MR or CT scan is a very common finding among asymptomatic persons. There are numerous similar examples in Sport and Exercise, including studies which have demonstrated significant tibial stress reactions in over 40% of asymptomatic […]

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Calling for help! What is the best example of a successful physical activity intervention that has made a sustained difference?

I’m tweaking my presentation for ACSM relating to ‘implementation’ and I’m keen to share success stories – or ‘bright lights’ as the Heath Brothers call it. Which interventions have made kids move? Helped adults reach the guidelines?  What about agitating the aged? (sorry!).  Gortmaker’s Planet Health, Sallis’ CATCH, and van Mechelen’s various studies at work […]

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Prof Evert Verhagen comments on the need for more implementation research

By Professor Evert Verhagen In reaction to the guest blog by professor Caroline Finch (May 9th), it is really good to see that the important topic of implementation gets the attention it needs. I’ve heard many times, in relation to van Mechelen’s sequence of prevention [1], that we need more intervention studies. This is whilst […]

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Guest Blog by Prof Caroline Finch: Implementation study design and a protocol example

There was considerable discussion at the IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury and Illness in Sport about the need for implementation studies – one could even say there was a certain buzz about this.  In my keynote address about the art and science of implementation research, I emphasised that to be most useful such […]

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Ultrasound in the Sports Medicine Office – A Top Gear Review Series

Having just attended the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) meeting in Salt Lake City (see BJSM Warm Up Feb 2011) I couldn’t help but be impressed by the progress in ultrasound (US) technology. Smaller, cheaper, better – tremendous advances. Over the next four weeks we will review: i) The AMSSM curriculum for US […]

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